Edgewood11
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I need a detailed explanation as to how nuclear fusion works. How it produces energy and why? Be very specific as I have a general understanding.
"Matter" is mostly just energy of interaction fields in particles. Only about 10% of the mass of the proton is in the valence quarks. The other 90% are in various particles that pop in and out from vacuum fluctuation and interaction fields. The fraction of "matter" that gets converted to energy is from these interactions. Effectively, two protons and two neutrons that make up a helium nucleus are lighter than each particle isolated by itself.Edgewood11 said:I understand that strong forces overcome electrostatic forces and a neutron is released. But why does this happen? Where does e=mc2 come? What matter is converted to energy?
About 1%, or 10 MeV out of ~940 MeV.K^2 said:Only about 10% of the mass of the proton is in the valence quarks.
That is true for special fusion processes only.I understand that strong forces overcome electrostatic forces and a neutron is released.
Quantum mechanics.But why does this happen?
Where does the universe with its physics come from?Where does e=mc2 come?
Edgewood11 said:I need a very detailed explanation as to how mass is lost in deuterium/tritium fusion and how energy is produced (e=mc2).
You are thinking of current mass vs dynamic mass. But even if we look at dynamic mass, only about 10% is due to the valence quarks. The other 90% is dynamic mass of the sea.mfb said:About 1%, or 10 MeV out of ~940 MeV.
Edgewood11 said:Helium= 28 MeV
Deuterium= 2 MeV
Tritium= 8 MeV
I thought fusion created energy because helium's binding energy is less than d and t?